Sir Thomas Honywood

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Sir Thomas Honywood, MP (Cromwellian Baron)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Charing, Kent, England
Death: May 26, 1666 (79-80)
London, Greater London, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Son of Robert Honywood, of Markshall; Elizabeth Honywood and Elizabeth Browne
Husband of Hestor Lamotte and Hester Lamotte
Father of Elizabeth Honywood; Elizabeth Cotton; Thomas Honywood and John Lamotte Honeywood, MP
Brother of Ann Wilde; Matthew Honeywood; Peter Honeywood; Henry Honeywood; Isaac Honeywood and 5 others
Half brother of Dorothy Thompson; Joyce Sadler; Sir Robert Honywood; Roger Honywood; Mary Honywood and 2 others

Managed by: Marsha Gail Veazey
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About Sir Thomas Honywood

Thomas Honywood

Sir Thomas Honywood (1586–1666), of Marks Hall in Essex, was a soldier during the English Civil War, later a Member of Parliament.

The eldest son of Robert Honywood and grandson of Mary Honywood.[1] He and head of a prominent Essex family, he was knighted in 1632. On the outbreak of the Civil War he declared for the parliamentary side, and was one of the Committee for Essex in 1648. In the same year, under the command of Thomas Fairfax, he led the Essex forces at the Siege of Colchester. In 1649, he was one of those named in the commission to try the King, but did not serve on the court. He also led a regiment at the Battle of Worcester in 1651.

Sir Thomas was elected to Parliament as member for Essex in the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate, and in 1658 was raised to Cromwell's new Upper House. However, he was distrusted by the hardline Puritans and considered "rather soft in his spirit". He retired from public life after the Restoration.

He married Hester (d.1681) daughter of John Le Mott, Merchant of London, on 13 May 1634 at Allhallows London Wall, London. She was the widow of John Manning, Merchant of London (d.1635). His daughter Elizabeth Honywood married Sir John Cotton and his son was John Le Mott Honywood.

From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Honywood

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  • Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 27
  • Honywood, Thomas by William Arthur Jobson Archbold ?
  • HONYWOOD, Sir THOMAS (1586–1666), parliamentarian, born at Betchworth Castle in Surrey on 15 Jan. 1586, was son of Robert Honywood (d. 1627) of Charing in Kent and Marks Hall in Essex, by his second wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Thomas Browne of Betchworth (d. 1631). Michael Honywood [q. v.] was a younger brother. An elder half-brother Robert inherited from the father Charing and his Kent estate, Thomas taking Marks Hall, where he chiefly lived. He was knighted in 1632.
  • When the civil war broke out, Honywood sided with the puritans, and Marks Hall became a headquarters for the roundheads in Essex. Throughout 1643 he, with other deputy-lieutenants, was busily raising troops for the parliament, and carrying out the orders of the leaders in London (cf. the correspondence preserved among the manuscripts of Mr. G. A. Lowndes, App. to 7th Rep. Hist. MSS. Comm. pp. 551–66). In 1648, with Colonel Whalley and two thousand horse and foot of the district, he effected a junction with Fairfax, advanced upon Colchester, and was present at its surrender on 27 Aug. In the course of the next year Honywood and Colonel Cooke received orders to dismantle the fortifications of the town, which they did not obey.
  • On 21 Jan. 1650 a commission was granted to Honywood to be colonel of a regiment of foot for the eastern division of Essex; in December of the same year he again garrisoned Colchester, and on 19 Feb. following he had a commission as captain of horse. In March 1651, while in Colchester, he probably had to meet large expenses out of his own estate, and wishing to send away the garrison, he was met by a refusal from the council on the ground that the fortifications had not been dismantled, as had long ago been ordered. When, however, on 5 July he certified that the place could no longer be held by troops, he was allowed to dismiss the soldiers. The same year Honywood hurried from Essex with all the troops he could gather, in company with Colonel Clarke, to Worcester, where he took part in the battle at the head of his Essex regiment. After the battle Honywood and his Essex friend, Colonel Cooke, passed through Oxford, and were created doctors of civil law. In 1654 he was one of the knights of the shire for Essex, and did good service for Cromwell in assisting to put down the rising of that year. He was paid 500l. by warrant in 1655, probably to compensate him for paying his regiment. In 1656 he was again in parliament, and in 1657 he became a member of Cromwell's upper house. A man of character and the brother-in-law of Sir Henry Vane, Honywood was powerful in Cromwell's court. He was able to get his relative, Sir Robert Honywood of Charing, made a member of the council of state in 1659, and he was himself a very active commissioner in the east of England in that year.
  • Honywood (according to Pepys) stayed with Pepys's father on 2 June 1660. He was then very old. He died at Cotton House, Westminster, on 26 May 1666, while on a visit to his son-in-law, Sir John Cotton of Connington, the son of the antiquary (see under Cotton, Sir Robert Bruce). His body was buried in the chancel of Marks Hall Church.
  • Honywood married, 10 May 1634, Hester (d. 1681), daughter of John Lamotte, a merchant of London, widow of John Manning. By her he had seven children, of whom four died young; his daughter Elizabeth (1637–1702), who had married Sir John Cotton, with his sons Thomas (1639–1672), and John Lamotte (d. 1693), survived him. The two sons succeeded to the family estate in succession, and both died without issue. The property thus passed to Robert Honywood of Charing.
  • [Wood's Fasti Oxon. ed. Bliss, ii. 168; Chester's Lond. Mar. Lic. p. 705; Morant's Essex, ii. 167; Berry's Essex Genealogies, p. 72; Hist. MSS. Comm. App. to 7th Rep. pp. 551–66; Whitelocke's Mem. pp. 311, 666; Cromwell's Colchester, i. 106 et seq.; Noble's Regicides, i. 361; Pepys's Diary, i. 104, 361; Burton's Diary, clxxxii; Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1649–60.]
  • From: http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Honywood,_Thomas_(DNB00)
  • https://archive.org/stream/dictionarynatio25stepgoog#page/n271/mode... to https://archive.org/stream/dictionarynatio25stepgoog#page/n272/mode... _________________________
  • Sir John Cotton, 3rd Baronet (1621 – 12 September 1702) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1661 and 1687.
  • Cotton was the son of Sir Thomas Cotton, 2nd Baronet of Conington, Huntingdonshire, and his first wife Margaret Howard, daughter of Lord William Howard, of Naworth Castle, Cumberland. He became a gentleman of the Privy Chamber in 1661. In 1661, Cotton was elected Member of Parliament for Huntingdon in the Cavalier Parliament. He succeeded to the baronetcy on the death of his father on 13 May 1662. In 1685 he was elected MP for Huntingdonshire.[1]
  • Cotton died at the age 80 at Stratton, Bedfordshire, and was buried at Conington where he has a monument.[1]
  • Cotton married firstly Dorothy Anderson, daughter of Edmund Anderson, of Stratton and Eyworth and his wife Alice Constable, daughter of Sir John Constable, who was later Cotton's stepmother. He married secondly on 20 October 1658, at Mark's Hall, Essex, Elizabeth Honywood, daughter of Sir Thomas Honywood, of Mark's Hall, and his wife Hester Lamotte, daughter of John Lamotte, of London.[1]
  • From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_John_Cotton,_3rd_Baronet,_of_Conni... _______________________
  • HONYWOOD, John Lamotte (1647-94), of Marks Hall, Markshall, Essex
  • bap. 21 May 1647, 5th but 2nd surv. s. of Sir Thomas Honywood† of Marks Hall by Hester, da. and h. of John La Motte, Weaver and alderman of London, wid. of John Manning, merchant, of Hackney, Mdx. educ. ?Felsted sch.; Christ’s, Camb. 1665; I. Temple 1668. m. Elizabeth, da. and h. of Sir William Wiseman, 1st Bt.†, of Rivenhall, Essex, s.p. suc. bro. 1672.1
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1690-1715/member/ho... _____________________

The eldest son of Robert Honywood and head of a prominent Essex family, he was knighted in 1632. On the outbreak of the Civil War he declared for the parliamentary side, and was one of the Committee for Essex in 1648. In the same year, under the command of Thomas Fairfax, he led the Essex forces at the Siege of Colchester. In 1649, he was one of those named in the commission to try the King, but did not serve on the court. He also led a regiment at the Battle of Worcester in 1651.

Sir Thomas was elected to Parliament as member for Essex in the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate, and in 1658 was raised to Cromwell's new Upper House. However, he was distrusted by the hardline Puritans and considered "rather soft in his spirit". He retired from public life after the Restoration.

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Sir Thomas Honywood's Timeline

1586
1586
Charing, Kent, England
1637
1637
Markshall, Essex, England
1637
Marks Hall Road, Colchester, Essex, England, CO6 1TG, United Kingdom
1647
1647
1666
May 26, 1666
Age 80
London, Greater London, England, United Kingdom
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